Black Plague, epidemics that killed about one third of the European population in the 14th century

Blois, city of Central France where the Jews were the firt time accused of ritual murder in that country

Blood for Trucks,
negotiation between Nazi Germany and the Jews to spare the one million
Jews from Hungary from death in exchange for the supply of trucks; the
initiative was opposed by Britain who refused to allow Jewish
immigration to Palestine

Boabdil, the last ruler of the kingdom of Granada before it fell to the Catholic Monarchs

Lord Moyne, British Resident in Cairo during WW-II; he opposed the Blood for Trucks
initiative, which attempted to save one million Jews from Hungary, and
was assassinated by the Lehi (Stern Group) in late 1943

Nicaea,
the modern-day
Iznik in Turkey where Emperor Constantine conveyed a council of
Christian leaders to formalise several principles for the foundation of
the Christian religion in the Roman empire

Number 36 as the essence of
Light, for example in the
36 righteous people that live in every generation (Talmud Sukkah 45b),
of the 36 candles of Chanukah (1+2+...+8=36), or even the majority that
is needed for a Sanhedrin to get a verdict (36 votes out of 70
members); the words related to the original Light of the Creation
(light, luminaries, lamp) appears 36 times in the Torah; also the
Talmud is composed of 36 tractates; the number 36 is also
reflected in the 36th Generation

Tiberius
Alexander,
an Alexandrian of Jewish origin but his family had assimilated and
embraced Roman culture and citizenship; he was procurator of Judea at
the beginning of the reign of Agrippa II, then governor of Alexandria
during the Jewish War, before joining Titus in the final siege against
Jerusalem